This civil appeal by grant of special leave petition concerns classification
dispute. According to the assessee 'fryums' fall under item No.2 of Part I of
Schedule II which refers to 'cooked food' and in which case the rate of tax is
4%. On the other hand, according to the Department the item 'fryums' falls
under Part VII of Schedule II to the M.P. Commercial Tax Act, 1994, under which
the rate of tax is 8% (earlier it was 6%) The short question, therefore, which
arises for determination in this civil appeal is the meaning of the term
'cooked food' in M.P. Commercial Tax Act, 1994.

Though the expression 'cooked food' has been defined under Section 2(g) of
the said 1994 Act in this civil appeal we are concerned with the Assessment
Years 1992-93 and 1993-94. It is made clear that the assessee is a registered
dealer under M.P. General Sales Tax Act 1958 and thereafter under M.P.
Commercial Tax Act, 1994. It is not in dispute that the assessee has been
assessed under the above entries of the 1994 Act. This is because the 1958 Act
stood replaced by the 1994 Act and the original assessment made under the 1958
Act have been treated to have been made under the 1994 Act.

On 12th March, 1996 the Assistant Commissioner, Indore, assessed sale of
'fryums' at 8% sales tax under the residuary entry referred to above. He
demanded tax of Rs.1.33 lakhs (rounded off) for the Assessment Years 1.4.92 to
31.3.93. The Commissioner of Commercial Tax, in an application made under
Section 68 of the 1994 Act held that 'fryums' were neither Namkeen nor 'cooked
food' nor 'papad' nor 'cereals', and therefore, they were taxable under the above
residual entry of Part VII of Schedule II of the 1994 Act. On 20.6.1997 the
Appellate Authority dismissed the appeal. The matter was carried in revision.
The revision was also dismissed.

The Assistant Commissioner had assessed the sale of 'fryums' for the
subsequent period commencing from 1.4.1993 to 31.3.1994 also under the above
residuary entry at 8% and demanded sales tax amounting to Rs.66,202.

Aggrieved by the aforestated decision in respect of the above two years the
assessee moved the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Writ Petition under Articles
226/227 of the Constitution praying for a declaration that 'fryums' be held as
'cooked food' liable to tax under Entry IV of Part I of Schedule II of the 1958
Act corresponding to Entry 2 of Part I of Schedule II of the 1994 Act. After
hearing both the parties the learned single Judge came to the conclusion that
'fryums' are 'cooked food' liable to be assessed under Entry 2 Part I of
Schedule II to the 1994 Act.

Aggrieved by the decision of the learned single Judge the Department carried
the matter in appeal to the Division Bench which has confirmed the decision of
the learned single Judge.

1. All other goods not included in Schedule I or any other part of this
Schedule."

In the case of Commissioner of Sales Tax M.P., Indore v. Shri Ballabhdas
Ishwardas, Bombay Bazar, Khandwa 1968 (21) STC 309, it has been held that the
term 'cooked food' cannot be read in a wider sense so as to include everything
made fit for eating by application of heat, boiling, baking, roasting, grilling
etc. The term is confined to these cooked items which one generally takes at
regular meal hours.

In the case of Commissioner of Sales Tax, M.P. v.

India Coffee Workers Co-operative Society Ltd., Jabalpur, 1970(25) STC 43
the High Court has held that the term 'cooked food' excluded meals from
description of words under Item 9 of Schedule I read with Section 10(1) of M.P.

General Sales Tax Act, 1959. That, the term 'meal' was not defined under
that Act, and therefore, one has to understand that word in terms of common
parlance and popular meaning. It was therefore, held that supply of items like ice-
cream, toast, fried eggs, vegetable and mutton cutlets did not constitute meals
though the said items were also eatables.

In the present case we have quoted the definition of the term 'cooked food'.
It is an inclusive definition. It includes sweets, batasha, mishri, shrikhand,
rabari, doodhpak, tea and coffee but excludes ice-cream, kulfi, ice-candy,
cakes, pastries, biscuits, chocolates, toffees, lozenges and mawa.

That the item 'cooked food' is inclusive definition which indicates by
illustration what the legislatures intended to mean when it has used the term
'cooked food'. Reading of the above inclusive part of the definition shows that
only consumables are sought to be included in the term 'cooked food'. In the
case of 'fryums' there is no dispute that the dough/base is a semi-food. There
is also no doubt that in the case of 'fryums' a further cooking process was
required.

It is not in dispute that the 'fryums' came in plastic bags.

These 'fryums' were required to be fried depending on the taste of the
consumer. In the circumstances we are of the view that 'fryums' were like seviyan
. 'Fryums' were required to be fried in edible oil. That oil had to be heated.
There was certain process required to be applied before 'fryums' become
consumable. In these circumstances the item 'fryums' in the present case will
not fall within the term 'cooked food' under Item 2 Part I of Schedule II to
the 1994 Act. It will fall under the residuary item "all other goods not
included in any part of Schedule I".

In the case of Bharat Co-operative Bank (Mumbai) Ltd. v. Co-operative Bank
Employees Union 2007(5) SCALE 57, this Court has held that when the word
'includes' is used in the definition, as is the case under Section 2(g) of the
1994 Act, the legislature does not intend to restrict the definition; it makes
the definition enumerative and not exhaustive, that is to say, the term defined
will retain its ordinary meaning but its scope would be extended to bring
within the term certain matters which in its ordinary meaning may or may not
comprise. Applying the above test to the term 'cooked food' in Section 2(g) of
the 1994 Act we find that the said term uses the word 'includes' in the
definition. The said term 'cooked food' makes the definition enumerative when
it includes within the said term sweets, batasha, mishri, shrikhand, doodpat,
tea and coffee. When it enumerates items like sweets, mishri, batasha,
dhoodpak, tea and coffee the enumerated items help us to probe into the
legislative intent. The legislative intent in the present case under Section
2(g) is to include consumables. 'Fryums' in the present case at the relevant
time were not directly consumable. They were under-cooked items. They were
semi-cooked items. They required further process of frying and addition of
preservatives to make them consumables even after the specified time. But for
the preservatives the items would have become stale.

For the above reasons we set aside the impugned judgment and allow this
civil appeal filed by the Department with no order as to costs.